By Cheryl Pellerin DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, November 14, 2015 — Everyone has a role to play
to ensure veterans have the opportunities and support they deserve, President
Barack Obama said today.
In his weekly address from the White House, three days after
the nation observed Veterans Day, Obama said gratitude to veterans should
extend beyond what they’ve done in the past.
“It should remind us of our responsibility to serve them as
well as they have served us,” he said. “It should compel us to keep our
veterans central to the ongoing work of this nation.”
Historic Investments
In recent years, the nation has made historic investments to
boost the Veterans Affairs Department’s budget, expand veterans’ benefits and
improve care for wounded warriors, Obama added.
The disability claims backlog has been cut by nearly 90
percent from its peak, and veteran homelessness has been reduced as tens of
thousands of them have been helped to get off the streets, the president said.
The veteran unemployment rate is 3.9 percent, lower than the national average,
he added.
“Of course we’re not satisfied,” he said. “We’ve still got
more work to do, and I’ve directed my administration to keep doing everything
it can to fulfill our promise to our veterans.”
But this isn’t a job for government alone, the president
said, and all have a role to play.
‘They Know How to Get Stuff Done’
Less than 1 percent of Americans are serving in uniform,
Obama noted, so most don’t see and appreciate the skills and assets that
veterans offer. But every American should know that the nation’s veterans are
some of the most talented, capable people in the world, he said.
“They’ve mastered skills and technologies and leadership
roles that are impossible to teach off the battlefield,” he said. “They know
how to get stuff done, and as our veterans will tell you themselves, they’re
not finished serving their country.” Veterans are teachers and doctors,
engineers and entrepreneurs, social workers and community leaders, and they
serve in statehouses across the country and in Congress, he noted.
The president said he regularly tells small business owners
and CEOs that if they want to get the job done, they should hire a veteran,
adding that every sector, industry and community in the country can benefit
from their talents.
The Best of America
Medically retired Army Capt. Florent Groberg proved that
troops and veterans give the nation their very best, the president said.
Three years ago, on patrol in Afghanistan, Groberg saw a
suicide bomber coming toward his unit. Without hesitating, he grabbed the
bomber by his vest and helped to push him to the ground. When the bomb went
off, Groberg was badly injured, and four of his comrades were killed in the
incident, but his sacrifice saved many more soldiers.
Groberg represents the very best of America, the president
said, and this week Obama presented him with the Medal of Honor for his
actions.
“Veterans like Flo deserve the nation’s gratitude,” the
president said. “They deserve the chance to keep serving the country they
risked everything to defend. And so we must come together to keep giving them
that chance -- not just on Veterans Day, but on every single day of the year.”
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